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The blue-ringed octopus spends much of its life hiding in crevices.
One of these is the infamous blue-ringed octopus.
The blue-ringed octopus, despite its small size, carries enough venom to kill 26 adult humans within minutes.
The toxin is produced by bacteria within blue-ringed octopuses.
The greater blue-ringed octopus eats mostly crustaceans such as crabs and shrimp.
If the blue-ringed octopus loses an arm, it can regenerate it within six weeks.
Greater blue-ringed octopuses can weigh between 10 and 100 grams depending if the octopus is young or adult.
All octopuses are venomous, but only one group, the blue-ringed octopus, is known to be deadly to humans.
The very venomous blue-ringed octopus becomes bright yellow with blue rings when it is provoked.
The Blue-ringed octopus has distinctive blue rings on its body and on its eight arms.
Blue-ringed octopus bites are often fatal, and the bite of other octopuses can cause unpleasant symptoms.
Blue-ringed octopus females lay only one clutch of about 50 eggs in their lifetimes towards the end of autumn.
No blue-ringed octopus antivenom is available.
There are two types of mollusc that are actively venomous: the cone shells and the blue-ringed octopus.
That is a fully adult and deadly Moluccan Blue-Ringed Octopus!"
And in a few organisms, most notably the blue-ringed octopus, TTX is used to capture prey.
Many octopuses have poison glands, but few are toxic to humans - the bite of the blue-ringed octopuses is the exception.
Bond is seduced by one of Khan's associates, Magda, and notices that she has a blue-ringed octopus tattoo.
This poison can also be found in other animals such as the Blue-Ringed Octopus, cone snails, and even some newts.
Creatures like colorful nudibranchs, anglerfish, shrimp, blue-ringed octopus, and rare pygmy seahorses.
The Blue-ringed octopus (genus Hapalochlaena) is the most venomous octopus.
Greater blue-ringed octopus (Hapalochlaena lunulata)
The blue-ringed octopus pounces on its prey, seizing it with its arms and pulling it towards its mouth.
The mating ritual for the blue-ringed octopus begins when a male approaches a female and begins to caress her with his modified arm, the hectocotylus.
In common with other octopuses, the blue-ringed octopus swims by expelling water from its hyponome (funnel) in a form of jet propulsion.
There are three confirmed species of Hapalochlaena, and a fourth is still being researched:
Blue Ring Octopuses (Hapalochlaena spec.)
Hapalochlaena nierstraszi was described in 1938 from a single specimen from the Bay of Bengal; the validity of this taxon has been questioned.
Blue-ringed octopuses in the genus Hapalochlaena, which live around Australia and New Guinea, bite humans only if severely provoked, but their venom kills 25% of human victims.